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F. Rostgaard

Person Name: Fr. Rostgaard Topics: Third Sunday in Lent Translator of "Naar mig min Synd vil krænke" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika

E. O. Schwartzkopf

Person Name: Schwarzkopf Topics: Third Sunday in Lent Translator of "Kom, Brødre, lad os haste" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika

M. Nilssoen

Person Name: Mikkel (Nilssøn) Topics: Third Sunday in Lent Author of "Din Synd den gjør dig blind og lam" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika

J. N. Frantzen

Person Name: Johan Frantzen Topics: Third Sunday in Lent Author of "Satan skal i Støvet trædes" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika

Ahasuer Fritsch

1629 - 1701 Person Name: Ahasv. Fritsch Topics: Fjerde Søndag efter Paaske Til Høimesse; Fourth Sunday after Easter; Søndag efter Jul Til Høimesse -Til Sekund Tekstrækkes Evangelium; Sunday after Christmas; Sjette Søndag efter Hellig 3 Kongers Dag Til Aftengudstjeneste; Sixth Sunday after Epiphany; Andre Søndag I Faste Til Høimesse -Til Sekund Tekstrækkes Evangelium; Second Sunday in Lent; Tredje Søndag efter Paaske Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Tredje Tekstrækkes Epistel; Third Sunday after Easter; Alle Helgens Dag Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Sekund Tekstrækkes Lextie; Alle Helgens Dag Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Tredje Tekstrækkes Lextie; All Saints Day; All Saints Day; Tjuesjete Søndag efter Trefoldiheds Fest Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Tredje Tekstrækkes Epistel; Twenty sixth Sunday after Trinity Sunday; Hengivelse til Jesus; Devotion to Jesus; Liv, det evige; Eternal Life; Pilgrimsvandring, de Kristnes; The Christian Pilgrimage Author of "Allevegne, hvor jeg vanker" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika Born: De­cem­ber 16, 1629, Mücheln, Sax­o­ny. Died: Au­gust 24, 1701, Ru­dol­stadt, Ger­ma­ny. With help from the fam­ily of a young no­ble he tu­tored, Fritsch re­ceived a good ed­u­ca­tion, earn­ing his law de­gree from the Un­i­ver­si­ty of Jena in 1661. He lat­er be­came chan­cel­lor of the un­i­ver­si­ty and pres­i­dent of the Con­sis­to­ry of Ru­dol­stadt. He wrote on num­er­ous sub­jects, in­clud­ing an­ti­qui­ties, law, and re­li­gion, and col­lect­ed hymns. Hymns-- "Liebster Im­man­u­el, Herzog der Frommen" "Dearest Im­man­u­el, Prince of the Lowly" Music-- WAS FRAG' ICH NACH DER WELT --www.cyberhymnal.org/bio

Ludämiliä Elisabeth Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt

1640 - 1672 Person Name: Ludämilie Elisabeth Topics: Slutningssalmer; Closing Hymns; Sædvanlige Salmer til Høimesse; High Mass; Andre Søndag I Faste Til Høimesse -Til Sekund Tekstrækkes Evangelium; Second Sunday in Lent; Palmesøndag Til Høimesse -Til Tredje Teksxtækkes Evangelium; Palm Sunday; Tjuetredje Søndag efter Trefoldiheds Fest Til Høimesse -Til Sekund Tekstrækkes Evangelium; Twenty third Sunday after Trinity Sunday; Glæde og Hvile I Herren; Joy and Rest in the Lord; Hengivelse til Jesus; Devotion to Jesus; Lydighed; Obedience Author of "Jesus, Jesus, Jesus sigter" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika Ludämilia Elisabeth, second daughter of Count Ludwig Gunther I. of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, was born April 7, 1640, at the castle of Heidecksburg, near Rudolstadt, and was educated there along with her cousin Emilie Juliane (q.v.). In 1665 she went with her mother to the dowager castle of Friedensburg near Leutenberg; but after her mother's death, in 1670, she returned to Rudolstadt, where, on Dec. 20, 1671, she was formally betrothed to Count Christian Wilhelm of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen. At this time measles was raging in the district, and her eldest sister, Sophie Juliane, was seized, and died Feb. 14, 1672. By attending on her, Ludämilia and the youngest sister, Christiane Magdalene, caught the infection, and both died at Rudolstadt on March 12,1672. (Koch, iv. 50-56; Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie xix. 365-367, &c.) She received a careful and pious training, was a good Latin scholar, and well read in divinity and other branches of learning. Her hymns show her to have been of a deeply pious nature, and of intense love to Jesus. They were composed rather for her own edification than for use in public worship. Ten of them were included in the Budolstadt Gesang-Buch, 1682. They, were collected, to the number of 206, and edited by her cousin Emilie (probably assisted by A. Fritsch) as Die Stimme der Freundin, das ist: Geistliche Lieder welche, aus brünstiger und biss ans Ende beharrter Jesus Liebe verfertiget und gebraucht, &c. Rudolstadt, 1687. This was reprinted, with an introduction by W. Thilo, at Stuttgart, 1856. Three of those hymns have been translated viz.:— i. Jesus, Jesus, nichts als Jesus. [Love to Christ] 1687, No. 104, p. 312, in 5 st. of 6 1., entitled “Resignation to the Will of God." The initials of the stanzas form the word Jesus, and each stanza ends, "Herr, wie du willt." It seems to have appeared in the 2nd edition of A. Fritsch's Jesus Lieder (not in the first edition of 1668. No copy of the 2nd edition is now known), and in the 3rd edition, Jena, 1675, is No. 43, Rambach, iii. 188, gives it from the Vermehrtes Gesang-Büchlein, Halberstadt, 1673. In the Berlin Geistliche Lieder, ed. 1863. The translation in common use is :__ Jesus, Jesus, Jesus only. In full, by A. Crull, as No. 282 in the Ohio Lutheran Hymnal, 1880. Other translations are :—(1) "Jesus, Jesus, nought but Jesus, Shall my wish and," in the Supplement to German Psal., ed. 1765, p. 11. (2) "Jesus, 'tis my aim divine," by Miss Dunn, 1857, p. 107. (3) “ 'Tis Jesus that's my sole desire," by Dr. G. Walker, 1860, p. 92. (4) "Jesus, Jesus, naught but Jesus, Can my," by R. Massie, in the British Herald, July, 1865, p. 103, and in Reid's Praise Book, 1872, No. 393. (5) "Jesus, Jesus, nought but Jesus, Shall my wish be," in Cantica Sanctorum, 1880, No. 97. ii. Jesu Blut komm über mich. [Holy Communion.] A Passiontide Hymn on the Blood of Jesus. 1687, p. 45, No. 14, in 8 st. In the Blätter für Hymnologie, 1886, p. 180, it is cited as in the 2nd ed., 1679, of A. Fritsch's Himmels-Lust (1st ed., 1670, does not contain it); and as there marked "S. J. G. Z. S. V. H.," the initials of the elder sister, Sophie Juliane. Translated as:-—"Jesus' Blood come over me," as No. 448, in pt. i. of the Moravian Hymn Book, 1754. iii. Sorge, Vater! sorge du. [Morning.] 1687, No. 168, in 7 st., entitled "On Resignation to the Care of God," and founded on 1 Peter v. 7. Previously in the Rudolstadt Gesang-Buch,1682, p. 692. Translated as:—"Care, O Father, care for me," in the Monthly Packet, xiv., 1872, p. 211. [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Johannes Tauler

1300 - 1361 Person Name: Tauler Topics: Midfaste Søndag Til Aftengudstjeneste; Skriftemaal; Confessions; Second Sunday in Lent; Palmesøndag Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Tredje Tekstrækkes Lektie; Palm Sunday; Sjette Søndag efter Trefoldiheds Fest Til Høimesse; Sixth Sunday aftet Trinity Sunday; Twelfth Sunday after Trinity Sunday; Syttende Søndag efter Trefoldiheds Fest Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Tredje Tekstrækkes Epistel; Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity Sunday; Twenty third Sunday after Trinity Sunday; Frihed; Freedom; Hengivelse til Jesus; Devotion to Jesus; Jesus, vor Forsoner; Jesus, Our Atonement; Lov og Evangelium; Law and Gospel; Syndsforladelse og Retfærdiggjørelse; Sincerity and Justification; Anden Søndag I Faste Til Høimesse -Til Anden Tekstrækkes Evangelium; Tjuetredje Søndag efter Trefoldiheds Fest Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Anden Tekstrækkes Epistel; Tolvte Søndag efter Trefoldiheds Fest Til Aftengudstjeneste - Til Anden Tekstrækkes Epistel Author of "Hvorhen skal jeg dog fly" in Salmebog for Lutherske Kristne i Amerika Tauler, Johannes, was born at Strassburg about 1300, and seems to have been the son of Nikolus Tauler or Taweler, of Finkweiler, who in 1304 was a member of the Strassburg Town Council (Mitglied des Raths). About the year 1318 he entered the Dominican convent at Strassburg. He studied for eight years at Strassburg, where the famous Meister Eckhart (d. 1327) was Dominican Professor of Theology from 1312 to 1320. He then went to Cologne to undergo a further training, in theory and practical work, extending over four years. Thereafter he returned to Strassburg where he soon came into note as an eloquent and practical preacher. When much of Germany was laid under interdict by Pope John XXII., because of resenting his interference with the election of the German Emperor in 1324, the Dominicans at Strassburg still continued to preach, to celebrate mass, and to administer to the people the consolations of the Church, even though Strassburg was under the Papal bann. After the Diet of Frankfurt in 1338 the strife between Emperor and Pope (now Benedict XII., Pope since 1334) became more pronounced. Up to 1339 the Dominicans at Strassburg still continued to sing mass, but were then compiled to cease doing so by command of the superiors of their Order. As the Strassburg magistracy still remained faithful to the Emperor, they resented this submission, and accordingly closed the Dominican convent in 1339, and it stood empty lor three years and a half. About the beginning of 1339 we find Tauler in Basel, where he remained for some years, in close connection with Heinrich of Nördlingen and others of the so-called "Friends of God" in that city and neighbourhood. About 1346 he was again in Strassburg, aud he spent most of the remainder of his life there and at Cologne. He died at Strassburg on June 16, 1361.

John Mardley

Topics: The Order of Salvation Repentance; Quinquagesima Sunday; Sundays in Lent; Third Sunday after Trinity; Nineteenth Sunday after Trinity Author of "O Lord, turn not Thy face from me" in Church Book

Michael Joncas

b. 1951 Person Name: Michael Joncas, b. 1951 Topics: Commandments; Confidence; Eternal Life/Heaven; Evangelization; Hope; Ministry/Mission; Obedience; Truth; Wisdom; Word; Lent 3 Year B; Easter Vigil Reading 6; Commandments; Confidence; Eternal Life/Heaven; Evangelization; Hope; Ministry/Mission; Obedience; Truth; Wisdom; Word; Lent 3 Year B; Easter Vigil Reading 6; Commandments; Confidence; Eternal Life/Heaven; Evangelization; Hope; Ministry/Mission; Obedience; Truth; Wisdom; Word; Lent 3 Year B; Easter Vigil Reading 6; Ordinary Time Common Psalm; Third Ordinary Year C; Ninth Ordinary Year A; Fifteenth Ordinary Year A; Fifteenth Ordinary Year C; Twenty-Sixth Ordinary Year B; Service Music for Mass: Liturgy of the Word Responsorial Psalm; Sunday Celebrations in the Absence of a Priest Responsorial Psalm Composer of "[The law of the LORD is perfect]" in Journeysongs (2nd ed.)

Bob Hurd

b. 1950 Person Name: Bob Hurd, b. 1950 Topics: Commandments; Love of God for Us; Obedience; Retreats; Sin; Advent Season Common Psalm; Advent 1 Year C; Lent 1 Year B; Commandments; Love of God for Us; Obedience; Retreats; Sin; Advent Season Common Psalm; Advent 1 Year C; Lent 1 Year B; Commandments; Love of God for Us; Obedience; Retreats; Sin; Advent Season Common Psalm; Advent 1 Year C; Lent 1 Year B; Third Ordinary Year B; Twenty-Sixth Ordinary Year A; The Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed (All Souls) (November 2); Service Music for Mass: Liturgy of the Word Responsorial Psalm; Sunday Celebrations in the Absence of a Priest Responsorial Psalm Author (English verses) of "Psalm 25: A Ti, Señor (To You, O Lord)" in Journeysongs (2nd ed.)

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